The Green Mill in Chicago is one of the
world’s greatest jazz clubs, but there
aren’t many world-class trios that only play
the Mill. Outside of performing 250 nights a
year with the Penn and Teller magic show in
Las Vegas, that’s the case with pianist Mik
Jones. His new live album, Chicago Trio
2010, captures all the flavor of on- and offstage
banter at the club during an engagement
there last year with bassist Larry Kohut
and drummer Eric Montzka.
During a brisk, immaculate “Perdido,”
one of Jones’ bandmates on the CD chuckles,
“Stop that!” as the pianist dunks another
cheeky quote from Fats Waller or Glenn
Miller into the speeding narrative. An audience
member comments, “You guys are
good!” during a particularly flamboyant rendition
of “But Not For Me,” with idiomatic
passages recalling Art Tatum or Teddy
Wilson.

In reality, the trio only gets the opportunity
to meet at the storied venue two nights
a year because of Jones’ dream gig in Vegas.
“I get health insurance, a pension plan and a
freshly tuned seven-foot grand every night
after emerging from the Green Room,” said
Jones of his steady job at the Rio Hotel with
Penn and Teller. But things weren’t quite as
cushy before Penn Jillette—who was tipped
off that this amazing piano man was accompanying
the diners at the Eiffel Tower restaurant
in the Paris Hotel in Vegas—offered
him a bigger gig.

After wearying of the commute from
Boston (where he studied at Berklee College
of Music) to do session work in New York,
Jones had been enticed to Vegas a decade ago by the promise of a lucrative
showroom engagement that didn’t pan out. “One of the first marks
of our friendship,” recalled Jillette on the phone from Vegas, “was when
he tattooed his head and hands, which basically lost him his restaurant
gig and committed him to us.”
Jillette had decided, at age 45, to learn standup bass, and he credits
Jones with showing him the jazz ropes during their nightly pre-show
duo gigs at the Rio. “I had told Mike it’d be just like Oscar Peterson playing with Ray Brown, if Ray Brown wasn’t that good,” quipped Jillette.

Certainly Jones is steeped in the stylings of Peterson and “three-handed swing” master Dave McKenna, though he prefers to develop his bass lines organically rather than deploy what he identifies as the memorized patterns that worked so well for Peterson. He was transfixed when he first saw McKenna perform at the Copley Plaza Hotel in Boston in 1981. “He was playing everything a walking bass player would play, plus
comping and soloing at the same time,” recalled Jones, who thenceforth
holed up in a Berklee practice room for six hours a day trying to figure
out what McKenna was doing.
Another hero was Jamaican pianist Monty Alexander, who ultimately
inducted Jones into the executive piano club when the two met as part
of a junket on the QE2 cruise ship. “Monty pulled me aside and told me,
‘You’ve got to stop this self-deprecating stuff. You’re one of us, there’s
only a few of us around.’”

Playing six nights a week from 5 p.m. until 1 a.m. at the Bostonian
Hotel for three years before going to Vegas honed Jones’ chops. “I would
sometimes play for two-and-a-half hours straight doing the kind of medleys
McKenna would do, where a song like ‘I Never Knew’ leads into ‘I
Wish I Knew,’ then ‘I Wished On The Moon’ leads to ‘Moon Song’ to
‘No Moon At All.’”
Such punning/thematic segues were evident this spring at the Mill
when Jones—joined by Montzka and pithy Chicago bassist Kelly Sill—
reprised the Hoagy Carmichael medley he recorded on Stretches Out
(Chiaroscuro, 2001), including “One Morning In May/The Nearness
Of You/Lazy River.” He also ripped through another favorite, “Black
Orpheus,” glancing Tad Dameron’s “Hothouse” amidst percussive block
chord architecture and greyhound chromatic chases in either hand.

The pianist’s new recording is available for free download at his
website (jonesjazz.com), so that he can maximize listenership. “[Green
Mill owner] Dave Jemilo keeps saying, ‘If you ever get famous, y’know,
maybe you’ll still come back here?’ and I say, ‘Absolutely!’ I keep waiting.
If I don’t make it by the time I am 50, I think I may have to push it up tp 75."